PUBLIC SAFETY Kobe Bryant case could come...
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PUBLIC SAFETY
Kobe Bryant case could come to Orange County
Attorneys for the woman who accused Kobe Bryant of rape said this
week that they are considering filing a civil suit in Orange County
against the Los Angeles Lakers star and Newport Coast resident.
That move would give the 20-year-old woman the chance to collect
more money in damages because Colorado law caps the amount of money
awarded in civil cases. Attorneys said they would decide in the next
30 days whether or not to file in California.
* A mystery sickness struck 57 people attending a conference at
the Hilton Costa Mesa Hotel Thursday morning.
A food inspector found no immediate cause for the illness, which
caused vomiting and diarrhea, and the kitchen at the hotel remained
open. Epidemiologists with the Orange County Health Care Agency are
investigating the cause.
EDUCATION
School district setting its five-year plan
The Newport-Mesa School District board approved a preliminary
draft of its Strategic Plan as a framework of goals and objectives
for the next five years.
District officials proposed a redesign of the high school
structure, meaning night and online classes would be added to the
regular curriculum. The board will vote on the plan at its Nov. 23
meeting.
* Researchers from UC Irvine’s biomedical engineering department
unveiled seven inventions to business people on Tuesday in an attempt
to secure the funds to market them. The OCTANe@UCI technology
coalition was designed to transfer the technology phase to industry.
The medical breakthroughs included a lab-on-a-chip that enables
consistent and efficient drug delivery to a diseased site; a low-cost
cochlear implant that improves the ability to understand speech and
music; and a dental device called a periometer, which increases
dental implant success and can measure structural integrity in teeth.
COSTA MESA
Basketball’s bad boy Dennis Rodman is back
Former NBA superstar and ace rebounder Dennis Rodman on Tuesday
signed with the Orange County Crush, an American Basketball Assn.
team based at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa.
Rodman, who moved from his West Newport home to Huntington Beach
in September, played just three games for the Long Beach Jam, another
ABA team based in Long Beach, last season.
The Orange County Crush will play its home games in the grandstand
arena at the Orange County Fairgrounds. The first of 18 home games
is scheduled for Nov. 18 in an arena with an expected capacity of
4,211. Details of Rodman’s contract are expected to be revealed
during a news conference on Tuesday.
NEWPORT BEACH
City to study new plan for Marinapark
The resounding defeat of a plan to build a resort on the
harbor-front Marinapark site has left more questions than answers.
The City Council on Tuesday called for a study session on various
issues surrounding the site including how best to get public input on
what its future should hold.
* The council gave the city’s park rangers the authority to
enforce permits for parks and other city facilities. It also
established safety zones for its after-school programs at parks. In
the past, when staff members were concerned about adults bothering
children in the parks, they couldn’t do anything about it.
* Some City Council members were irritated that the cost for a
road meant to reduce traffic near Newport Coast Elementary School
jumped 47% over the original bid. The increase happened mainly
because the city rushed to finish the road before school started,
Public Works Director Steve Badum said.
* Cell phone reception will soon be possible at the intersection
of Superior Avenue and West Coast Highway now that the City Council
approved permits for Cingular and Sprint to mount antennas on 32-foot
light poles along Superior Avenue. Residents in the area had opposed
the 35-foot high poles the companies had suggested previously.
* The Environmental Nature Center this week dedicated a butterfly
house built with donations from the Rotary clubs of Newport-Balboa
and its sister city of Okazaki, Japan.
Right now, the 1,300-square-foot, screened-in house holds only
native plants and a few moths. More than 300 native butterflies will
live in the house, probably starting in March.
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